Editor's note: Julian Zelizer
is a professor of history and public affairs at Princeton University.
He is the author of "Jimmy Carter" and "Governing America."
(CNN) -- As millions of Americans think about how
they can do better in 2014 through their New Year resolutions, President
Obama might want to make a few of his own.
Although it is true that
the president has faced a horrendous political environment -- filled
with tea party Republicans intent on obstructing every proposal and
media that are often too willing to report dubious facts -- Obama has
not made his situation much easier for himself.
In a number of areas, he
might think about strategies that can improve his political standing and
put him in a better position for the political fights over immigration,
the budget, climate change and foreign policy that loom ahead.
Julian Zelizer
Treat your Democrats well:
President Obama has not taken enough care of Democrats on Capitol Hill.
Throughout the year, Democrats have continued to express frustration
with the White House for putting them into extraordinarily difficult
political situations and sometimes leaving them to stand alone as they
face the fallout.
Senate Majority Leader
Harry Reid was reportedly angry with the president for failing to give
his caucus any credit for helping him to get out of the jam with the
health care website. "I did communicate to him," Reid told The Hill,
"that there have been things done by the White House that improved the
health care bill, and those fixes were suggested originally by my
senators, and they got no credit for it. I thought that was improper."
Last week, House Democrat
John Lewis criticized the administration for not listening to the
advice of civil rights leaders regarding appointments for the federal
bench in Georgia. This story fits a familiar pattern that has created
ongoing tensions with Capitol Hill since 2009.
Obama needs to remember
that his fate is closely tied to the Democrats on Capitol Hill -- Reid
and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi should be his best friends -- and
he needs them to help him in his struggles with Republicans.
Black leader worried by Obama court pick
Highs and Lows for Pres. Obama in 2013
Sweat the small stuff:
There is considerable evidence that President Obama seems uninterested
with detail. His major concern is in the big picture, trying to find
ways to achieve his long-term policy goals, whether that be a diplomatic
solution to the nuclear buildup in the Middle East or achieving health
care reform, without as much interest in the nitty-gritty of how these
policies will happen.
It is true that any
president needs to keep his eye on the big picture in order to avoid the
fate of President Jimmy Carter, who became so mired in the minutiae of
policy that he lost his ability to lead the nation through crisis. But
as former Secretary of State Colin Powell says in his famous
presentation about leadership, "Check the small things. The devil is in
the details; sometimes the solution to a sticky problem, too. Don't
sweat the small stuff, but don't ignore it, either."
The dangers of President
Obama's approach became apparent with the rollout of health care
reform, in which the president and his team were not on top of the
details of implementation in the weeks leading up to the launch of the
website, and they allowed technical mistakes to turn into a huge
political fiasco.
The continual delays
over implementing other parts of the program have also caused huge
embarrassment and offered fodder to his political enemies. The President
can't afford for this to happen again. He will need to hold more of his
staff accountable for these kinds of mistakes, bringing in some fresh
voices, as he has done with John Podesta, and getting rid of those who
have made huge mistakes. He needs to realize that making sure that the
small stuff is in order is essential to big achievements.
Control the conversation:
For a president who is as professorial as Barack Obama, it is difficult
to accept the harsh reality of the media world within which Washington
operates.
It is an environment
where spurious information goes viral and political rhetoric appears as
fact. The blogosphere makes it difficult for producers and editors to
control the flow of information, while the plethora of partisan
reporting and commentary makes it nearly impossible for consumers of the
news to separate fact from fiction.
President Obama's
outlook has been to sit back and allow the truth to find its way to the
surface. He has maintained a steadfast determination that, given the
facts, Americans will reach the right decision.
But in our political
world, this just doesn't happen. The result has been that his opponents
have been remarkably effective at shaping the national dialogue over
public policy. President Obama has been forced to constantly play
defense, to explain his failures and to dig himself out of holes rather
than spending time talking about what he has done and what else he hopes
to accomplish.
Re-energize the grass roots:
When Obama started on his road to the White House, he thrived on the
energy and support he received from average Americans who were inspired
by his call for a new kind of politics and his determination to have a
campaign that was built from the bottom up. The local networks of
campaign supporters spread the word about who this candidate was while
raising money and motivating voters to line up behind his campaign.
The enthusiasm and
energy of his grass-roots supporters have grown weak. Many of his
supporters have become disillusioned with a president who seemed far too
much like other politicians and who abandoned some of his key promises
in areas like national security. The revelations about the NSA
surveillance program were a huge blow to these constituencies.
This is most notable
with younger Americans, once enamored with the president but now
disillusioned by broken promises on issues such as civil liberties and a
still-difficult economy. With the 2014 midterms as a focal point, the
President should get back to communicating with grass-roots Americans
and shaping the agenda of his final years in office based on some of the
issues they feel have been sidetracked in the past few years.
Focus, focus, focus:
Over the past year, the President has frequently moved from one subject
to another without a clear rhyme or reason. One of the few areas where a
president has control is over his or her own agenda.
During the President's
first few years, he had a laser-like focus on health care, financial
reform and the economy. On foreign policy, he spoke to the world about
improving America's relations overseas. That kind of focus, however, has
largely disappeared. President Obama has delivered some important
speeches, such as his address on inequality, but quickly moved on to
other issues rather than follow through.
Throughout the battles
over the budget, the president turned from one crisis to the next
without stopping and really putting forth a clear vision and set of
priorities in response to the austerity zeal of the GOP. He has allowed
his opponents to define the agenda, as opposed to the White House.
Even when Secretary of
State John Kerry moved aggressively to put into place diplomatic
solutions to nuclear threats, President Obama seemed to follow his lead
rather than outline this as a priority in foreign affairs.
Obama would do well to
stick to a few subjects, to articulate the direction he hopes to take
the nation and move forward methodically to make sure they come to
fruition.
Resolutions are easy to
make but difficult to follow. In the world of politics, the stakes of
sticking with those promises are big. Given the tremendous difficulties
that this president has faced and the dire approval ratings he is
seeing, it is time for President Obama to double down and make certain
that he does everything possible to put himself in a position to
strengthen his presidency, his party and his nation in his final years
in the White House.
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